58
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation: Focusing on Bank Clerical Staff since the Postwar Years*
Tomoko Komagawa
Hokkaido University
Gender-based job segregation in companies is the main cause of the gender gap in pay and careers. This paper sets out to examine the processes of for-mation and transformation of gender-based job segregation between the 1960s and present. The focus is on bank clerical staff, a field of employment with a large gender career gap in a representative industry that embodies Japa-nese-style business management. The examination by this paper clarifies the following facts. Male university graduates are assigned with priority to “lend-ing” and “corporate and individual financing,” roles in which they build ca-pacity and form careers through regular internal transfers. But this depends on the presence of male high school graduates who accept internal work and tend to have limited scope for promotions and elevation, and females who take care of clerical work. The aspect of females gradually raising the ceilings on their careers is important, based on measures for “utilizing women” in the work-force. However, this “utilization of women” by banks is no more than a meas-ure designed to overcome occasional management problems, and has merely created new “women’s jobs.” Meritocratic management and the “utilization of women” have transformed gender-based job segregation into a gender gap in promotions.
I. Introduction
Gender-based job segregation is an extremely important structural element that cre-
ates gender disparity on the labor market. This is why there have been numerous empirical
research studies focusing on gender-based job segregation in specific industries and occupa-
tions, ever since Cockburn (1983) analyzed gender disparity in jobs and authority in the
printing trade and Beechey (1987) highlighted the need for historical research and analysis
of the present situation of female labor and gender-based job segregation. For example,
Crompton and Sanderson (1990) looked to job segregation to explain why the average wage
for women was so far below that of men even after the 1970 Equal Pay Act, and researched
and analyzed gender job segregation in several industries. Strober and Arnold (1987),
meanwhile, examined the processes of hiring and workplace establishment of women in
bank teller work, which used to be a predominantly male domain, and analyzed the process
whereby gender-based job segregation is formed.
In Japan, gender-based job segregation inside companies is even more important as
the main cause of gender disparity in wages and careers. Large Japanese corporations adopt
the practice of hiring new graduates en masse (except for certain specialist and other occu-
*This paper was supported by MEXT Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (B) Grant No. 20710197 and Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C) Grant No. 24510368.
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation
59
pations). They then combine OJT with grade-based training and other forms of Off-JT via
regular job rotation, in a long-term commitment to developing human resources equipped
with the skills to master uncertainty (to use Koike’s term) (Koike and Inoki 2003). However,
this development of human resources follows divergent routes for men and women. Men
gather knowledge and experience while being moved from department to department on the
premise of long-term continuous employment, and are promoted in line with their years of
service. Women, on the other hand, are regarded as short-term continuous employees and
tend to be assigned to “women’s jobs” with limited scope for internal transfers. They are
rarely promoted to managerial posts, even after long years of service. Kumazawa (1996)
points out that the seniority system, one of the three main characteristics of Japanese busi-
ness management, depends on there being few workers at the top and many at the bottom,
and that in order to achieve this situation, Japanese companies are absolutely dependent on
gender-based job segregation. Gender-specific employment management, in which men and
women are given different work duties and employment terms, is structurally embedded in
Japanese-style management (Komagawa 2015).
Now that the government has placed promoting active participation by women at the
core of Japan’s growth strategy and set challenges such as elevating women to executive
and management positions,1 we need to decipher aspects of gender in employment man-
agement by Japanese companies, clarify the causes of gender disparity in human resource
development and career formation, and find measures for improvement. Therefore, the task
taken up in this paper is to attempt a historical retrospective on the processes whereby gen-
der-based job segregation has been formed, focusing on bank clerical staff—an occupation
featuring significant career disparity between men and women in a representative industry
that embodies Japanese-style management—and to consider how gender-based job segrega-
tion and career disparity have been affected by financial restructuring in recent years. From
there, an attempt will be made to find clues for improvement.
II. Method and Targets of Analysis
The focus will be on the following points in this analysis. Firstly, the analysis targets
both men and women, and the relationship between the two is depicted three-dimensionally.
Male workers are the basic building blocks of employment management by companies. As
such, the process of career formation by male workers based on different educational back-
grounds will first be examined. Career formation by female workers will then be ascertained,
and the complementary relationship with male jobs and careers will be identified. Secondly,
the focus will be turned on companies’ management strategies and employment manage-
ment in various eras, and an attempt will be made to identify the effect this has had on
1 The Abe Cabinet is committed to promoting active participation by women under the “Japan Re-vitalization Strategy—JAPAN is BACK” (June 14, 2013), and various ministries and agencies have announced measures to this end (Komagawa 2014).
Japan Labor Review, vol. 13, no. 3, Summer 2016
60
Table 1. Attributes of Survey Subjects (Former Bank X Employees)
Source: Compiled from results of interview survey.
gender-based job segregation. And thirdly, trends among labor subjects will be extracted
from an interview survey.
The targets of examination are major banks called “city banks” or “megabanks.”
Banks are representative workplaces for white-collar workers, and rigorously apply merito-
cratic management to male workers; they make limited “utilization” of women on the
premise of “women’s attributes,” and have historically created a gender structure revolving
around gender-specific employment management (Komagawa 2007). But these banks were
pressed into devising new management strategies as a result of financial restructuring in the
second half of the 1990s, when promoting measures to harness women’s abilities became an
important issue. Banks are suitable subjects for examination by this paper, in that they are in
the process of changing their gender-based job segregation and career disparity.
This paper will attempt a historical analysis focusing on the situation at City Bank X
between the 1960s and the first half of the 90s, when meritocratic management was intro-
duced or reinforced, but will also examine the impact of financial restructuring from the
second half of the 1990s onwards. For this paper, a survey was conducted mainly with the
Personnel Planning Department in City Bank XA, the successor to City Bank X, but also
with personnel departments and departments responsible for harnessing women’s abilities in
several other banks. Besides this, a career history survey was conducted with 23 former
employees of City Bank X (Table 1), and interviews were held with current employees,
former employees, dispatched workers and other non-regular employees of several other
banks.2 For purposes of this paper, “careers” will refer to chronological changes in work
duties, grades and job titles within an organization, “workplace culture” will refer to
2 The survey with former employees of major Bank X forming the core of this paper was based on semi-structured interviews. Besides this, the administrative centers and branches of several other ma-jor banks were visited and observed in action.
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation
61
awareness and values fostered and shared within a workplace due to the allocation of duties,
authority, etc., and “women’s jobs” will mean jobs with gender connotations and a notably
high female ratio within a given vocational field.
III. Transitions in Banks’ Management, Business, and Employment Management
Before discussing the contents of jobs and the process of career formation, let us look
at historical transitions in banks’ management, operational structure, and employment man-
agement, upon which that discussion is premised.
In banks, the foundations of the postwar operational structure were laid in around
1960. With the start of high-level economic growth and cash shortages in banks in the sec-
ond half of the 1950s, banks started assigning women to deposit counter (teller) positions in
order to promote an image of approachability. They also created or increased corporate and
individual financing clerks and put them in charge of acquiring deposits and loan clients.
They then installed deposit accounting machines, introduced one-stop unit systems for eve-
rything from reception to payments, and took steps to make their operations more efficient.
This meant merging or scrapping clerk positions, and reorganizing the clerk composition in
branches into “deposits” (deposit-related operations), “exchange” (exchange-related opera-
tions), “lending” (loan screening), and “corporate and individual financing” (client relations
for bank operations in general) (Figure 1). Male employees were assigned with priority to
loan screening and client relations, and females to deposit operations, as well as internal
clerical work for each type of clerk. In this way, they developed an integrated system
whereby the work brought in by corporate and individual financing clerks would be exe-
cuted by other clerks, and established an operational structure facilitating large-volume de-
posits and loans based on gender-based job segregation (Komagawa 2007).
Meritocratic management was introduced in the first half of the 1960s, following the
reorganization of operational structures. Banks had started introducing performance-related
pay in their payroll systems in the second half of the 1950s, but then introduced abil-
ity-based grade systems in the first half of the 1960s, and created systems of evaluating job
performance through personnel assessment. In the case of Bank A, the topics for evaluation
in personnel assessment were (i) performance appraisal (appraisal of the outcome from the
employee’s performance of work assignments during the assessment period), (ii) work ap-
proach appraisal (appraisal of the employee’s approach in applying ability to duties, i.e.
work attitude), (iii) ability appraisal (appraisal of expectations of future usefulness, i.e. la-
tent ability), (iv) personality appraisal (judgment of character and aptitude), and (v) overall
appraisal (to complement the first four appraisals) (Research Institution for Bank Employ-
ees 1969, 127). While the evaluation items were wide-ranging, including latent ability and
personality evaluation in addition to work performance, particular details were not indicat-
ed.
Japan Labor Review, vol. 13, no. 3, Summer 2016
62
Source: Compiled from results of interview survey. Figure 1. Personnel Composition of Bank X’s Branch a by Type of Clerk (1957/1969)
In 1964, Bank X introduced an ability-based grade system consisting of grades 4 to 1
for the clerical staff level, and the positions of investigator, assistant advisor and advisor for
the management staff level (Table 2). Promotions were judged from a combination of years
spent in a position and the personnel assessment in 5 stages from A to E. If an employee
was given an assessment of A or B in the 2nd year of a given grade, promotion to investiga-
tor was possible by age 31 at the earliest. If the assessment was only C, promotion to inves-
tigator would be delayed until age 48. This system created gaps in position and grade be-
tween employees who entered the bank at the same time, depending on their ability evalua-
tion in personnel assessment. Grade requirements were said to be “completely unrelated to
gender or educational background,”3 but as the internal clerical work assigned to female
3 Corporate History of Bank X.
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation
63
Tabl
e 2.
Ban
k X
’s A
bili
ty-B
ased
Gra
de S
yste
m
Sour
ce: C
ompi
led
from
Ban
k X
uni
on m
ater
ial a
nd r
esul
ts o
f in
terv
iew
sur
vey.
Japan Labor Review, vol. 13, no. 3, Summer 2016
64
Table 3. Outline of Bank XA’s Track-Based System of Employment Management
Source: Compiled from Bank XA Personnel Planning Department materials.
staff was regarded as “routine,” many women were assessed at level C and stagnated in low
grades.
Meritocratic management was intensified between the 1970s and 80s. The ratio of
ability-based pay in salaries rose from a city bank average of 4.8% in 1965 to 20.6% in
1970, 29.9% in 1975 and 35.0% in 1980 (Research Institution for Bank Employees 1983,
15). This kind of meritocratic management produced a mentality among men of long work-
ing hours and priority on jobs, causing a strong integration with companies by what became
known as the “company man.” For women, conversely, gender-specific employment man-
agement was intensified, and some bank employees were made non-regular. Banks set up
administrative centers in the first half of the 1970s, introduced secondary online systems in
around the mid-1970s, and established worker dispatch agencies. They started rationalizing
and centralizing administrative work and dispatching part-timers to branches in the first half
of the 1980s (Komagawa 1997). Then, to coincide with the enforcement of the Equal Em-
ployment Opportunity Act (1986), they introduced systems of career management based on
predetermined career tracks (career track systems). Table 3 shows an outline of Bank XA’s
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation
65
career track system.4 Employees selected for the “managerial career track (sogoshoku)”
(mainly male employees) were trained as candidates for executive and management posts,
while the “clerical career track (ippanshoku)” involved routine clerical work performed by
women and offered limited promotion prospects. The “specific managerial career track”
was one of the banks’ fundamental operations including client relations, and was designed
to harness expert ability. As such, it consisted of fewer employees than the two tracks men-
tioned above. Judging from the managerial career track (sogoshoku) and clerical career
track (ippanshoku), we can say that the career track system institutionalized gender dispari-
ty in employment terms based on the name of the track.
Thus, from around 1960 when the operational structure was established until the first
half of the 1990s, via the introduction of the career track system, banks introduced and re-
inforced meritocratic management, assigned male employees to lending and client relations
and developed their abilities, assigned women to internal clerical work, made some of them
non-regular and established low-level employment terms.
IV. Gender-Based Job Segregation and Male-Female Careers: 1960s to First Half of 1990s
1. Meritocratic Management and Career Formation of Male Employees Next, let us turn to job contents and careers. Human resource development by banks
can be divided into measures aimed at “management candidates,” “managers and supervi-
sors,” and “clerical workers.” Management candidates were trained as generalists with
broad operational knowledge, aspiring to positions from branch manager or head of de-
partment upwards. The targets in this case were male university graduates. On the other
hand, managers and supervisors were trained as specialists with expertise in specific opera-
tions, eventually becoming assistant branch managers and section heads. The targets here
used to be male high school graduates, but switched to male university graduates when the
hiring of male high school graduates was stopped after the mid-1980s. Clerical workers,
finally, were expected to process work quickly and accurately, but were outside the scope of
long-term ability development. With the exception of the managerial career track (sogosho-
ku), the majority of these were women.
In this way, bank employees were subject to different “expectation levels” based on
gender and educational background, and this was reflected in ability development. The main
method used for ability development involved OJT based on regular internal transfers; male
university graduates who were management candidates would experience various important
operations and acquire broad-ranging abilities on the premise of long-term continuous em-
ployment. By contrast, the operations assigned to male high school graduates were limited
in nature, while women experienced few internal transfers in the first place. So, first of all,
4 The specialist career course was specialized in work limited to system development and the like.
Japan Labor Review, vol. 13, no. 3, Summer 2016
66
Table 4. Career Formation Process of Male University Graduate UJ
Source: Compiled from interview survey. Note: “Major” = city branch handling major corporate loans, “Commercial” = branch in commer-
cial area handling small corporate loans and operations for individual clients, “Residential” = branch in residential area mainly handling operations for individual clients.
the process of career formation for male university graduates will be confirmed.
Table 4 shows the career formation process of male university graduate UJ. He joined
the bank in 1968. This was some years after the introduction of meritocratic management,
and Table 4 shows a typical pattern of ability development not limited to UJ’s individual
characteristics.5 The career formation process of male university graduates had the follow-
5 An individual characteristic of UJ’s career is that he was assigned to the overseas department in
the initial stage of his career. This is a development route designed for overseas postings, suggesting
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation
67
ing five characteristics. Firstly, they would be assigned to two different types of branch
(branch a and b) for about 5 years, where they would gain general experience in the bank’s
basic operations of “deposits,” “lending,” and “corporate and individual financing.” Sec-
ondly, after learning the basic operations, they would be assigned chiefly to “lending” and
“corporate and individual financing.” Thirdly, they would be transferred at approximately
3-year intervals, including distant transfers, and promoted each time. Fourthly, they would
expand the scope of their work through secondment, and would be promoted to branch
manager. And fifthly, they would be seconded and their employment transferred to an affili-
ate as they approached the standard executive retirement age of 53 (as it was then).
Male university graduates intensified their knowledge and experience through inter-
nal transfers, and developed the ability as generalists needed for managerial posts. By tak-
ing charge of the bank’s core operation of loan screening, in particular, they acquired the
ability demanded of branch managers. Therefore, let us now look at the career formation of
male university graduates under meritocratic management while confirming the labor pro-
cess involved in loan operations.
“Loan operations” refer to the work of analyzing the conditions of loan applications
and setting loan interest, etc. When screening loans, the employee goes to the client com-
pany and confirms its management status and policies from a broad perspective, and also
analyzes collateral, financial statements as well as other aspects. Skill in screening loans is
acquired by handling many different cases, and two to three years are considered necessary
to be able to screen at the minimum level. Male university graduate UG points out the im-
portance of experience, saying “You have to cultivate the ability to interpret figures. The
branch manager and assistant manager yell at us till we understand. You keep thinking, Ah,
now I see! You wish they’d told you everything from the beginning, but then what they’re
doing is giving you that experience from the inside. (part omitted) The ones who are good at
absorbing that kind of thing then go on to absorb it more and more” (Male university gradu-
ate UG).
They set the loan conditions, summarize them in an approval circular, then seek the
approval of the loan from the branch manager, etc. If the superior thinks the loan is too risky,
the client company could suffer cash-flow problems and go bankrupt. Employees responsi-
ble for loans must carefully prepare documentation to ensure that the loan can be safely
made to the client company. Male university graduate UJ recalls the constant pressure to
make persuasive arguments proving the client’s ability to repay, and to create data to sup-
port those arguments: “Your boss might say, ‘If sales go down by this much, the company
could run out of cash three months down the line and go bust’, so then you have to provide
all the data to show that the company will be all right because this, this and this will happen
that UJ was seen as a promising future prospect. However, UJ was soon transferred to branch a at his own request, thereupon returning to the normal development route. His executive committee experi-ence in the Federation of City Bank Employees’ Unions was based on a nomination by the bank, and was useful in forming human networks with talented employees of other banks.
Japan Labor Review, vol. 13, no. 3, Summer 2016
68
before it ever gets into difficulty.” He alone handled tens of these client companies, the
work volume was massive, and in his private life he couldn’t even remember the face of his
newborn baby. “I would take the last train home, or a taxi if I missed it, then work another
two hours or so there. Then I’d sleep for two or three hours, get up at five, wake myself up
by taking a hot bath, then work some more. Then I’d go to the bank, go to the client, gather
data. And when I’d done that, the next customer would come” (Male university graduate
UJ). Given this daily routine, it was sometimes a fine line between physical collapse and
survival, but while doing so he drove himself on because “it was too late to back out,” while
looking ahead to his next post.
Many bank employees have health issues as they suffer from sleeplessness and other
problems on top of stress at work. Long-term solo assignments away from home and the
attitude of prioritizing work over private life sometimes cause discord within the family.
Male university graduate UG recalls that, when sent on a solo assignment while his child
was taking exams for senior high school, “At the most important time in my child’s life, I
left it all to my wife.” And on his own well-being, he says, “I depended on my family for
the minimum necessities of life to somehow maintain my physical condition. . . . I carried
on without worrying too much about that—I was selfish,” and even admits, “I sacrificed my
family.”
But even then, all of the men surveyed say that they never once thought of quitting
the bank, except at the initial stage of their careers. They had a responsibility to feed their
families, while the size of their annual salary and social status were also factors. But what
provided a driving force over and beyond these was their sense of responsibility toward
their job and their desire for self-fulfillment through their job. Male university graduate UJ
says “The job comes with its own responsibility, its own status. We are relied upon by the
customers.” Male university graduate UG says, “You have to work to give your child a good
life, to feed your family,” but adds that “More than those, I think what motivates a man is
wanting to do a good job, wanting to become what he really wants to be.”
To this is added the desire for promotion. In the case of male university graduates, the
aim is to be promoted to branch manager. And there was a certain sense of security that the
evaluation to this end would come naturally as long as the firm’s requirements were met,
however unreasonable they were. Even if disparity in promotions arose in an ability-based
grade system, the evaluation of male university graduates was more like a weeding out of
employees who made “mistakes” or had “problems,” rather than a positive process of selec-
tion. As such, there was a feeling that promotions were “less about being selected, more
about being removed from the running” (male university graduate UF), and “There was no
pecking order; everyone went up collectively” (male university graduate UH). Many male
university graduates took the attitude that “if we just carry on, we will rise in status” (male
university graduate UJ). This sense of security toward evaluation made male university
graduates reluctant to make themselves too conspicuous in the workplace. Instead, they
would approach their work with the attitude that the demanding aspects of it were a
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation
69
Table 5. Career Formation Process of Male High School Graduate HE
Source: Compiled from interview survey.
“touchstone for the next post.” Male high school graduates were not on the same playing
field as male university graduates. Their rivals for promotion were always contemporary
male university graduates; they gathered information on personnel transfers by their con-
temporaries, and confirmed their own position in the bank in that way.6
Turning our attention to the careers of male high school graduates, five out of ap-
proximately 100 male high school graduates who joined banks in 1955 have been promoted
to branch managers, but the majority have gone no further than assistant branch manager or
chief clerk. This is due to a lack of experience in loan operations. Table 5 shows part of the
career formation process of male high school graduate HE. After working in two branches
and Head Office, he was assigned as a corporate and individual financing clerk in a branch,
and worked in an administrative center for central processing of bank slips from his latter
40s onwards. During this time, he has had no experience of loan operations. As a result,
6 Not all male university graduates are promoted to branch manager. Male university graduate UI
is an “elite” bank employee with experience of overseas posting, but his personnel assessment in his 10th year was poor, and in his 25th year he was seconded and his employment was transferred. Ac-cording to UI, his superior at the time said that he had made a mistake in the assessment. However, the truth of this statement is under some doubt, and in any case, an assessment once made is impossible to reverse and continues to have an impact on UI’s career.
Japan Labor Review, vol. 13, no. 3, Summer 2016
70
despite being a 4-time winner of the branch manager’s prize awarded to staff with excellent
sales performance, he says he was always aware of being at a disadvantage when talking to
clients about loans. Again, he was promoted to investigator in 1977, but did not rise to chief
clerk. This is because the work handled by male high school graduates mainly revolved
around “corporate and individual financing,” “deposits” or “exchange,” and they were ex-
pected either to produce sales results as staff in charge of client relations, or to become de-
posit clerks or other staff responsible for internal operations. This was quite in contrast to
male university graduates, who alternately took care of “lending” and “corporate and indi-
vidual financing” before being promoted to branch manager. So there was job segregation
based on educational background among male employees, and this was reflected in their
careers. For this reason, an awareness and attitude somewhat distanced from meritocratic
management is observed among some male high school graduates who understood the lim-
its to their promotion prospects. They could be seen to live their vocational and private lives
in proactive ways, such as by cooperating with their co-earner wives, avoiding overtime
work, and taking their children to and from the nursery.
2. The “Utilization of Women” and Women’s Careers Next, let’s look at women’s careers. Banks practice gender-specific employment
management, and expect women to apply their abilities as clerical workers. At the same
time, banks have also “utilized women” in line with the management issues of each epoch.
Here, we will look back over initiatives aimed at “utilizing women” from the 1960s to the
first half of the 1990s, to see how this has affected gender-based job segregation. A point to
note is that “the utilization of women” by banks in this period was limited to harnessing
their ability in the workplace; it did not include various measures to support women’s con-
tinued employment, etc.
The “utilization of women” by banks after the war started with the “popularization of
banks” in the second half of the 1950s. Banks started to create cheerful, approachable im-
ages in their attempt to secure deposits from individual customers. One means to this end
was the mass recruitment of female high school graduates, who were assigned to bank
counter work as tellers. Bank X increased its recruitment of female high school graduates
from 362 in 1961 to 1,074 in 1965,7 and assigned “veteran” women with at least 6 years of
service to counter work. As Figure 1 shows, female employees of Bank X’s branch a dou-
bled between 1957 and 1969. Tellers were mainly women, with men supporting or provid-
ing cover at particularly busy times or during lunch breaks. This increase in female tellers
created a perception that counter work “suited women” as it drew on “female attributes,”
eventually evolving into an assessment that “this occupation has been switched to women as
7 Bank X Securities Report and Nihon Kin’yu Meikan (The Japan Financial Directory) published
by The Japan Financial News Co., Ltd. As for the number of men hired during this period, male uni-versity graduates increased from 53 to 69 and male high school graduates from 103 to 118, revealing a relatively conspicuous rise in hiring of female high school graduates.
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation
71
it only involves simple and light work” (Women’s and Young Workers’ Bureau, Ministry of
Labour 1964, 29).
Concerns over the declining job evaluation of counter work are voiced by a “veteran”
female high school graduate who was selected as a teller: “Both men and women can do this
work. But because women do it, the job is regarded as being one rank down” (female high
school graduate WB). Nevertheless, the theory that counter work “suited women” was ac-
cepted by the majority of women. In a workplace where there was already a heavy tone of
gender disparity (for example, in that the payroll system made distinctions based on gender
and duties8), there was expectation even from the women themselves that “utilizing women”
by making the most of “women’s characteristics” would raise the profile of female workers
in the workforce. As a result, women positively accepted theories that “women are attentive
to detail” and “women are courteous in their dealings,” and attempted to secure a distinct
role for themselves in the form of women’s jobs. As female high school graduate WD says,
“I thought the work should not be left to wimpish men. I felt a kind of pride that we could
do it more accurately, faster, and without mistakes.”
Thus, gender-specific job placements combined with theories of gender-specific
characteristics in clerical role divisions to produce a workplace culture in which “men work
outside (lending, corporate and individual financing) while women protect the inside (in-
ternal work).” This resembled the gender-based role division of the modern family, in which
“the husband worked outside and the wife was a full-time housewife,” and was widely ac-
cepted by male and female workers. Gender-based job segregation was created by “utilizing
women” for counter work at the beginning of the 1960s, as a measure to address the chal-
lenge of securing deposits (which had been a management issue since the 1950s).
In the 1970s, given the search for new business and compositional changes in the fe-
male workforce, the occupational field of female university graduates expanded and
long-serving female workers were introduced into loan screening operations.9 When Bank
X started hiring female university graduates in 1971, it assigned some of them to interna-
tional operations, as well as secretarial and other Head Office work. There, they were given
work that required some specialization, such as using their foreign language ability to pre-
pare work documents, managing executives’ schedules, and negotiating. Female university
graduates hired by branches were to be fast-tracked to the front line by assigning them to
counter work at an early stage. Despite being regarded as “routine,” counter work involved
contact with customers, and “it would be unthinkable to be made a teller in the first year
8 In the 1957 revision of its payroll system, Bank X maintained the four-pillar structure of its sen-iority-based salaries based on gender and duties. Bank X Employees’ Union Journal June 25, 1957 issue.
9 According to the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Report on Basic School Statistics, in 1970 the female ratio of advancement to university was 6.5% and to junior college was 11.2%, causing a rise of around 20% in women from higher educational backgrounds among all female employees. The employment terms of female junior college graduates differ from bank to bank (Komagawa 2007).
Japan Labor Review, vol. 13, no. 3, Summer 2016
72
after graduating from senior high school” (male university graduate UF). Nevertheless, after
10 days to 2 weeks of counter training, female university graduates were assigned to coun-
ter work from their first year. Long-serving women were selected for individual loan work.
In 1970, Bank X separated loan work from “lending,” and created a system in which loan
specialists would cover all processes as full-time staff, from advising customers to pro-
cessing applications, screening, execution, management and recovery. Loan specialists took
care of screening work for calculating collateral value and clients’ ability to repay, and
managing the processes of loan execution.
The “effects” of these two measures to “utilize women” in the 1970s were as follows.
For female university graduates, women’s occupational fields in Head Office operations
were broadened, while in the branches they took charge of counter work from the first year,
thus introducing disparity among women based on educational background. Long-serving
female employees became involved in individual loan screening work, and cultivated the
ability needed for promotion to managerial posts. However, the “utilization” of female uni-
versity graduates did not go beyond the scope of work that “suited women,” while the loan
work handled by long-serving female employees was “routine work” distinct from corpo-
rate financing. As stated above, the 1970s was a period in which meritocratic management
was intensified with a focus on men, and the two attempts to “utilize women” did not usher
in a revision of gender-specific employment management or an improvement in women’s
employment terms.
Now let’s look at the careers of female high school graduates. Table 6 shows the ca-
reer formation process of female high school graduate WG. In 36 years between joining the
bank and reaching mandatory retirement age, she only worked in two branches. Her as-
signments were also few in number. For the first 10 years, she was engaged in “female work”
in internal administration, namely as a “cashier,” “deposit clerk” and “teller.” After serving
for a year on the union’s executive committee, she was assigned to “loan administration” in
the same branch, and worked as clerical assistant to a male employee in charge of loan
screening for 12 years. It was in her 24th year, at age 41, that she was made a “loan special-
ist” as a measure for “utilizing” long-serving female staff. She stayed in that capacity for
another 13 years until retirement, and was never promoted to a managerial post.
Because loan operations depend on the ability to evaluate collateral, WG broadened
the scope of her work while learning from a male colleague. Even when her child broke a
bone and had to stay in hospital for surgery, she “couldn’t take time off, because work had
been scheduled” (female high school graduate WG), and worked on equal terms with a male
high school graduate who was also a loan specialist. WG took pride in the joy of being able
to do “work that is useful to people” and the sense of fulfilment that she was “personally
responsible for the work from beginning to end.” However, her evaluation in personnel as-
sessment did not improve, and she received no promotions at all after rising to Grade 1
Clerk at age 35. In WG’s case, the evaluation may have been reduced due to her experience
as a member of the employees’ union executive committee. But even without that, WG’s
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation
73
Table 6. Career Formation Process of Female High School Graduate WG
Source: Compiled from interview survey.
perception is that married women with children “will not be promoted to higher grades or
positions, whatever the case.” As WG says with a hint of resentment, “Promotions are not
judged on the content of your work at all. It’s a complete joke.” Women were tied to
“women’s jobs” and had no opportunities for ability development through internal transfers.
And even if they applied their abilities by taking advantage of measures to “utilize women,”
they could not achieve high evaluation in a system of gender-specific employment man-
agement that positioned women as clerical workers. Women were rarely promoted to man-
agerial posts, even if they continued to work until mandatory retirement age.
In terms of the job content, employment terms and gender ratio of the managerial ca-
reer track (sogoshoku) and clerical career track (ippanshoku), the track-based system of
career management introduced in the second half of the 1980s could be seen as an institu-
tionalized version of the previous gender-specific employment management. Moreover, the
choice of career track was conditional upon educational background, with only university
graduates or higher eligible for the managerial career track. Even applicants with a univer-
sity degree or higher were expected to choose career tracks based on professional awareness.
As such, the career track system could be said to have used educational background and
professional awareness to selectively appoint female workers, who were increasingly from
higher educational backgrounds. The career formation of women on the managerial career
track will be examined in section V.
Japan Labor Review, vol. 13, no. 3, Summer 2016
74
3. Gender-Based Job Segregation and Career Structures Now, let us summarize job segregation and career structures in banks. In the case of
men, male university graduates were assigned primarily to “lending” and “corporate and
individual financing,” where they developed the skills needed by branch managers. Con-
versely, male high school graduates were mainly concentrated in “corporate and individual
financing” or internal work such as “deposits” and “exchange,” and their promotion pro-
spects tended to be limited. Women, moreover, were tied to “women’s jobs,” lacked oppor-
tunities for ability development through internal transfers, and were rarely promoted to
managerial posts.
Let us now check how this job segregation based on gender and educational back-
ground is reflected in ability-based grades. Table 7 shows the result of past surveys by the
Bank X employees’ union. The response rate was just over 50%, and tended to decrease
with increasing age and grade, so will be used as a reference material. The first finding is
that male university graduates were the quickest to receive grade promotion, while male
high school graduates were delayed by one rank and women by two to three ranks. The
second is that the range of grades occupied by each type expanded in 1985, causing a wid-
ening disparity between employees who joined at the same time. This is seen as a conse-
quence of intensified meritocratic management. The third is that, while some female em-
ployees were employed in the grade of “Manager” and above in 1985, others were still
“Grade 1 Clerks” even at age 45 or above. In 1985, the monthly salary for the minimum
basic grade was 281,900 yen for an Investigator but 247,900 yen for a Grade 1 Clerk,
showing a large wage disparity between the two. There were no male employees who re-
mained at the clerical level throughout their careers. The gender gap could be said to be
larger than the disparity due to educational background among male employees.
Focusing only on the careers of male university graduates, knowledge and experience
were certainly accumulated through regular internal transfers, resulting in promotions to
higher positions and grades. But these processes of ability development and career for-
mation depended on the presence of male high school graduates who took care of internal
operations and tended to have limited prospects for promotion, as well as female employees
who took care of the clerical work. The advance of meritocratic management and the “utili-
zation of women” had the effect of transforming gender-based job segregation into gender
disparity in promotions. The dividing line between careers within organizations, consisting
of job duties, grades and positions, shifted from educational backgrounds to gender, thus
forming and reinforcing gender-specific employment management. In around the mid-1960s,
this led to a gender relationship between male employees, who took care of “judgmental
work” and went through promotions while intensifying their commitment to the organiza-
tion, and female employees, who took on “routine” work that “suited women” on the prem-
ise of short-term service and stagnated in lowly positions and grades. This gender relation-
ship mutually reinforced a workplace culture incorporating gender-based role division, and
remained strong until the first half of the 1990s.
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation
75
Table 7. Distribution of Ability-Based Grades in Bank X (1974 and 1985)
Source: Compiled from the Bank X employees’ union, Situation of Promotions, 1974 and
1985 versions. Notes: 1. Response rate was 52.1% in 1974 and 60.6% in 1985. Response rate decreased with
increasing age and grade. 2. As very few responses were received from male university graduates aged 45 and 50+, the
figure shows the total of all educational backgrounds. 3. In 1974, “Investigator (lower)” is the total of the two lower classes of this grade and
“Investigator (higher)” the total of the two higher classes, corresponding to the 1985 “As-sistant manager” and “Manager,” respectively.
Japan Labor Review, vol. 13, no. 3, Summer 2016
76
V. Women’s Career Formation after Financial Restructuring: Second Half of 1990s to Present
The so-called “financial big bang” in the second half of the 1990s prompted a
large-scale financial restructuring that transcended business categories, the nine city banks
being integrated into four financial groups.10 As banks diversified their operations, they
prioritized investment trust services for individuals, an area promising market expansion
and stable commission revenues. The central providers of these services were women. So
now let’s see how women’s work duties and careers were affected by this emphasis on ser-
vices aimed at individuals (retail banking) after the financial restructuring.
As professionals handling products with no assurance of principal, staff engaged in
investment trust services require a strong sense of ethics. They also need to acquire the sta-
tus of FP (financial planners). Because it takes time to train them into the finished article,
“it’s a waste to rotate them after five years, as they do on the clerical career track” (Bank P).
For this reason, the banks set up specialist departments aimed at harnessing women’s abili-
ties, with a view to developing women’s abilities and easy working environments. They also
set out measures to support women’s career formation and a balance between work and
home life.11 Many employees of departments designed to harness women’s abilities were
women on the managerial career track. One female employee of Bank Q had survived the
rigorous selection of just 8 women included among 470 recruits on the 1992 managerial
career track, as well as being in the minority. These women are now proposing and imple-
menting measures based on their own experience of life events such as marriage and child-
birth, setting targets for the ratio of women in managerial posts, and offering consultation
on concerns about taking childcare leave. They are also promoting workplace awareness
reform by holding seminars for superiors who are unsure about letting their subordinates
take childbirth leave. These efforts have been successful, and the ratio of women in mana-
gerial posts increased from 4.7% in 2006 to 14.7% in 2013. Some 25 years after the intro-
duction of the career track system, women on the managerial career track who had worked
their way into the core of their employers’ organizations had become a force for reforming
those organizations.
10 “Mizuho Holdings” (Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank, Fuji Bank and Industrial Bank of Japan) was es-
tablished in 2000, “Mitsubishi Tokyo Financial Group” (Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, Mitsubishi Trust and Banking Corporation, Nippon Trust Bank and Tokyo Trust Bank, renamed “Mitsubishi UFJ Fi-nancial Group” with the addition of Sanwa Bank, Tokai Bank, and Toyo Trust and Banking in 2005) in 2001, “Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group” (Sakura Bank and Sumitomo Bank) in 2002, and “Resona Holdings” (Daiwa Bank, Kinki Osaka Bank, Nara Bank and Asahi Bank) in 2003. A reor-ganization of local financial institutions was also in progress at the same time, but it was based on a different rationale from that of the major banks (Komagawa 2009).
11 Mega-banks establishing departments designed to harness women’s ability were Resona Group in 2003, the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ in 2006, and Mizuho Bank and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation in 2008.
Gender-Based Job Segregation and the Gender Gap in Career Formation
77
However, the situation is more complex if we look at the branches. Many branches
with female managers are retail-type branches aimed at individual customers; there are few
female managers in full-banking branches that offer corporate loans as their main business.
Currently, with retail branches occupying a low status within each bank’s organization,
women struggle to win high evaluation even if they amass a strong business record as
branch managers. As a result, it would be difficult for them to be promoted to executive
status if they have no experience as full-banking branch managers. So while women are
increasingly being promoted to branch manager, the “utilization of women” is generating a
new type of career disparity by inducing women to enter retail business.
VI. Conclusion
Banks have been finding various ways to “utilize women” in line with their manage-
ment issues at various points in time. Women who have embraced the “utilization of women”
and have acquired skills and confidence are gradually raising the ceilings on their careers.
And now, following their lead as role models, a series of successors are emerging. On the
other hand, the “utilization of women” has given rise to new work that “suits women,” and
has failed to eliminate gender-based job segregation. This is because the “utilization of
women” by banks is sometimes no more than a way of surviving occasional management
issues, and has not been positioned as a long-term management strategy. This reflects the
predominance of banks in the new graduate recruitment market, where they can secure large
numbers of superior male university graduates, and suggests that male-centered meritocratic
management is still considered effective. For this reason, banks feel little need to revise
gender-specific employment management.
The following points may represent windows of change and clues to improvement in
this respect. Firstly, it remains to be seen whether government measures to promote wom-
en’s participation can have an impact on companies’ employment management. Secondly,
we need to focus on harnessing the ability of women, who are increasingly being promoted
to upper managerial posts, as well as the evaluation and treatment of women employed by
banks. But the most important thing of all is to ascertain fluctuations in male-centered mer-
itocratic management. Specifically, we need to verify two aspects of employment manage-
ment and male workers. The first, in terms of employment management, is the negative
impact of transfers every three years or so (including distant locations) on the ability devel-
opment of male university graduates. This is because bank operations are growing more
diverse and global, requiring ever greater levels of expertise from bank employees. The
second is the possibility that male workers could develop an attitude of prioritizing their
own health and private lives rather than placing value in their workplace, now that a univer-
sity degree is becoming the minimum requirement for new graduate hiring and there is a
weaker sense of security in the evaluation of male university graduates.
Japan Labor Review, vol. 13, no. 3, Summer 2016
78
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